Topic 3 - C4 - The Extent of Progress in Individual and Civil Rights Flashcards

1
Q

How did people obtain abortions before RVW?

A

Backstreet abortions or if college students could have safe abortions in 1960s by sympathetic doctors but difficult for poor women

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2
Q

How did the government feel towards abortion before 1973?

A
  • A crime in 30 states and legal in 20 states for certain circumstances
  • 1967 Colorado - first state to allow abortions in the case of rape, incest or threat to the women’s health
  • 1972 - 13 other states had similar laws e.g California, Oregon
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3
Q

What was Roe V Wade, 1973?

A

Texas women living in poverty who didn’t want to have a child grow up in poverty
Court said that women could abort in the first 13 weeks

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4
Q

Who opposed RVW?

A

National Right to Life Committee - set up in 1967 by the Catholic Church to oppose abortion - campaigned against RVW, Phyllis Schlafly,

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5
Q

What methods did anti abortion activists use?

A

1978 anti abortion mailing contained graphic pictures and pleaded ‘Stop the baby killers… Abortion means killings a living baby’

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6
Q

Who was Phyllis Schlafly?

A

Key opposer, ‘Sweetheart of the Silent Majority’ - campaigned for women’s skirts to be 2 inches below the knee. Closely associated with republican party

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7
Q

Who was Henry Hyde?

A

Henry Hyde led Congress in the passage of a bill banning federal funding for abortion. 1977 SC ruled Hyde’s measure constitutional

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8
Q

How had women’s rights progressed?

A

Women had greater freedom in their sexual lives and the right to abortion. Attitudes towards women and work changed - ⅔ female college students agreed that the women’s place was not in the home.

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9
Q

Why was the 1963 Equal Pay Act ineffective?

A

Professional women still received 73% of the salaries paid to men. 66% of US adults classified as poor were women

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10
Q

Why wasn’t the ERA passed until 1972?

A

Fears of gay marriage, women in combat, unisex toilets, end of the nuclear family
Activists like PS campaigned against it “STOP ERA” - 50,000 members

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11
Q

What impact did opposers to women’s rights have?

A

70% of those contacted by NRTLC turned out to vote in congressional elections in 1978 (2X national average), 50% donated at least $25

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12
Q

What did Beverley La Haye establish in 1979?

A

Concerned Women for America (CWA) to fight against ERA and abortion. Had 500,000 members by mid 1980s. Wanted women to stay at home, look after the family and not deprive men of possible employment.

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13
Q

What rights did union members and non union members have in the 1970s?

A

1973 - TUs had collective bargaining rights. They won health insurance, life insurance, paid vacations and pensions. Non union members had few rights but a minimum wage and maximum working hours.

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14
Q

How many people belonged to a trade union in 1970?

A

19 million

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15
Q

How many people were affected by strikes in 1974?

A

1.8 million employees affected by strikes and lockouts. 31.8 million working days lost

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16
Q

What strikes occurred in the 1970s?

A
  • 1970 - largest public employees strike - 200,000 postal workers went on strike, gov approved their collective bargaining rights but not their right to strike
  • 1977 - United Mine Workers 109 day strike led to a fuel shortage that caused layoffs and school closures
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17
Q

What legal factor caused decline of unions?

A

Common site picketing was illegal after 1951.

Less membership than other industrialised nations

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18
Q

Why were unions in decline?

A
  • Anti communism - associated TUs with communism
  • Corruption scandals - the leader of the transportation workers’ union was jailed in 1967
  • Thought TUs and strikes damaged the economy
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19
Q

Where were unions the strongest?

A
  • In heavy manufacturing industries
  • 1973-1980: 80% of new private sector jobs were in low paid service/retail areas. These workers often part time and harder to unionise
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20
Q

Why were there less union members in the South?

A

PW economic boom in the South. Owed to interstate highway system, growing use of air conditioning and anti union traditions in the South. Made it hard to attract members.

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21
Q

What is an example of companies needing to relocate to cut costs due to increased foreign competition?

A

RCA moved its production of TVs to Mexico in 1980. 38 million industrial jobs lost in the 1970s, mostly in the rust belt

22
Q

Why were US workers undermined in 1965?

A

1965 - immigration legislation allowed an influx of foreign workers willing to work for lower wages to undermine US labour including Cesar Chavez’s UFW

23
Q

Why did unions lack unity?

A

Some liked affirmative action while some didn’t

24
Q

What is an example of Nixon supporting affirmative action?

A

1975 - judge ruled against Detroit Police Department’s ‘last hired, first fired’ - protected jobs of recently hired black officers. Whites protested.

25
Q

How were non unionised workers treated?

A

Abused by employers, more so if illegal immigrants. 1970s - revival of sweatshops in the garment industry in NYC and LA. SS often included women - got 61% of a man’s wage in 1960, 65% in 1985.

26
Q

What type of discrimination did homosexuals suffer in 1973?

A

Employment and public hostility. Considered a mental illness that could be cured. Police harrassed bars and restaurants that served homosexuals.

27
Q

What impact did the Stonewall Riots have?

A

Gay pride. Encouraged NY Gay Liberation Front. NY Gay Liberation Front encouraged gays to come out.

28
Q

When did San Fransisco ban employment discrimination on the grounds of sexuality and when did NYC follow suit?

A
  1. NYC followed in 1979.
29
Q

When did NOW endorse gay rights and when was homosexuality not considered a mental health disorder?

A

1973 - NOW endorsed gay rights

1974 - American Psychiatric Association removed homosexuality from its list of psychological disorders

30
Q

What happened in 1978 in California with proposition 6?

A

Would have removed protection for homosexual teachers from discrimination and given the authority to fire gay teachers who publicly endorsed homosexuality

31
Q

What happened in politics in 1980 regarding gay rights?

A

The Democratic Party endorsed equality for all

32
Q

What was the impact in 1977-78 when baptist ministers Jerry Falwell and Tim LaHaye gained national attention in a successful battle against Miami pro gay rights?

A

Religious right strengthened. Miami activists gained greater assertiveness among gay rights - San Fran’s Castro area became a gay community.

33
Q

What problems did Native Americans face in the 1970s?

A

Unemployment at 20-80%. 44 yr life expectancy. High rates of suicide + alcoholism. Those living in cities had low paying jobs, poor housing and schooling

34
Q

How was Red Power defined?

A

‘the political and economic power to run our own lives in our own way’.

35
Q

What did the American Indian Movement aim to do after being established in 1968 and seen as the most militant movement?

A

Worked to improve ghetto housing, education and employment. Stressed positive imagery - opposed ‘washington redskins’. Monitored police racism, NA population in Minneapolis jails then fell by 60%

36
Q

What survival schools did the AIM establish?

A

Heart of the Earth Survival School in Minneapolis - instructed urban children in NA languages and culture.

37
Q

Why did AIM launch marches?

A

Publicise the need for compensation for US gov violations of 1800s treaties with NAs - 1972 Trail of Broken Treaties from San Fran to Washington DC

38
Q

Why did the Sioux occupy the Pine Ridge reservation in 1973?

A

Sioux tribe had been massacred in 1890 - publicised reservation problems: 50% unemployment, high suicide and alcoholism, 46yr life expectancy.

39
Q

What inequality in legal rights did Native Americans face?

A

White killer of Wesley Bad Heart Bull could have been released within 10 years, Wesley’s mother protested and arrested on a charge that could have led to 30 years imprisonment

40
Q

What legal victories did the NAs have?

A

1973 Northern Cheyenne of Montana won a fed court victory enabling them to renegotiate a mineral contracts - coal mining stopped in Navajo and Hopi reservation lands in 2005

41
Q

What did the Indian Self Determination and Education Assistance Act (1975) do?

A

Gave tribes control over federal programmes and reservation education. Insufficiently funded. Paved way for other helpful laws.

42
Q

What did the Healthcare Improvement Act (1976)?

A

Granted $1.6 billion to help improve the availability and delivery of healthcare for NAs

43
Q

What did the Oliphant (1978) do?

A

SC limited tribal authority over non Indians and indians of other tribes on reservations

44
Q

What did the Indian Religious Freedoms Act (1978)?

A

Recognised the right to practice NA traditions - allowed to take drug peyote

45
Q

How did the Sioux respond to $100 million compensation due to acquisition of Black Hills in 1979?

A

Sioux rejected money and demanded land instead

46
Q

What was the black American political status in the 1970s?

A
  • SC promoted aa - Griggs v Duke Power Company, 1971 - 250,000 companies had to employ a fair proportion of minority workers
  • All could vote
  • RN encouraged positive discrimination in university offers = ⅓ blacks MC by 1980
47
Q

What was the black American economic status in the 1970s?

A
  • ⅓ of all blacks and ½ black children lived below poverty line
  • Infant mortality 19% higher than some developing nations
  • ⅓ black workers had low skilled, low paid jobs
  • Average black earnings ½ of whites
  • Made up 12% of population but = 43% rapists, 55% accused of murder and 69% robbers
48
Q

Why did private school numbers rise?

A

Due to bussing - public schools only contain 16,000 whites by 1987 after containing 45,000 in 1974. Democrat congress legislated against busing in the Education Act of 1975

49
Q

How many blacks had political status at the end of the 1970s?

A
  • Black mayors elected in Detroit 1973, LA 1973, Washington DC 1974, Bham 1979
  • Black candidates rarely won white voters, only 1% of elected officials were black in 1980
50
Q

Who was Harvey Milk?

A

First openly gay elected official in California in 1977. Assassinated in 1978.